NUTRITION Analysis of Nutrition Interventions Within India’S Policy Framework RAJASTHAN
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BENEFIT-COST ANALYSIS NUTRITION Analysis of nutrition interventions within India’s policy framework RAJASTHAN Authors William Joe Assistant Professor Institute of Economic Growth, Delhi Abhishek Kumar Research Scholar Central University of Gujarat, Gandhinagar S.V. Subramanian Professor of Population Health and Geography Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health © 2018 Copenhagen Consensus Center [email protected] www.copenhagenconsensus.com This work has been produced as a part of the Rajasthan Priorities project under the larger, India Consensus project. This project is undertaken in partnership with Tata Trusts. Some rights reserved This work is available under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0). Under the Creative Commons Attribution license, you are free to copy, distribute, transmit, and adapt this work, including for commercial purposes, under the following conditions: Attribution Please cite the work as follows: #AUTHOR NAME#, #PAPER TITLE#, Rajasthan Priorities, Copenhagen Consensus Center, 2017. License: Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 4.0. Third-party-content Copenhagen Consensus Center does not necessarily own each component of the content contained within the work. If you wish to re-use a component of the work, it is your responsibility to determine whether permission is needed for that re-use and to obtain permission from the copyright owner. Examples of components can include, but are not limited to, tables, figures, or images. Analysis of nutrition interventions within India’s policy framework Rajasthan Priorities An India Consensus Prioritization Project William Joe Assistant Professor Institute of Economic Growth, Delhi Abhishek Kumar Research Scholar Central University of Gujarat, Gandhinagar S.V. Subramanian Professor of Population Health and Geography Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health Working paper as of April 27, 2018 ACADEMIC ABSTRACT .................................................................................................................................... 1 POLICY ABSTRACT .......................................................................................................................................... 2 DIRECT NUTRITION BASED INTERVENTIONS ................................................................................................................... 2 INTERPERSONAL COUNSELLING FOR BEHAVIOUR CHANGE ................................................................................................ 3 SUPPLEMENTARY FOOD FOR MOTHER AND CHILD .......................................................................................................... 4 MICRONUTRIENT SUPPLEMENTATION FOR PREGNANT WOMEN DURING ANC VISITS ............................................................. 5 COMMUNITY BASED TREATMENT OF CHILDREN WITH SAM USING READY-TO-USE THERAPUTIC FOODS (RUTF) ........................ 6 THE PROBLEM ............................................................................................................................................... 7 OVERVIEW: PENETRATION, PREVENTION WITH INTERVENTION ......................................................................................... 7 IMPLEMENTATION CONSIDERATIONS .......................................................................................................................... 8 COSTS AND BENEFITS .............................................................................................................................................. 8 ACRONYMS ................................................................................................................................................. 10 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................................... 11 PROPOSED INTERVENTION BACKGROUND ................................................................................................... 13 BACKGROUND AND EVIDENCE OF INTERVENTIONS ....................................................................................................... 13 DESCRIPTION OF INTERVENTIONS ............................................................................................................................. 15 CALCULATION OF COSTS AND BENEFITS ..................................................................................................................... 16 METHODOLOGY ........................................................................................................................................... 18 METHODOLOGY: OVERALL, PROMOTION AND PROVISION PACKAGE ............................................................................... 18 METHODOLOGY: MICRONUTRIENT SUPPLEMENTATION FOR PREGNANT WOMEN DURING ANC VISITS ................................... 18 METHODOLOGY: COMMUNITY BASED TREATMENT OF CHILDREN WITH SAM USING RUTF (CMAM) ................................... 19 INTERVENTION EFFECTIVENESS AND CALCULATION OF HEALTH EFFECTS ..................................................... 21 COMMON APPROACH ........................................................................................................................................... 22 RESULTS ...................................................................................................................................................... 23 CONCLUSION ............................................................................................................................................... 26 REFERENCES ................................................................................................................................................ 29 APPENDIX .................................................................................................................................................... 34 Academic Abstract The prevalence of malnutrition in Rajasthan is extremely high and it performs very Badly as compared to other Indian states. The intergenerational cycle of undernourishment is a concern for future prospects of its economic growth as it enters the most productive phase of demographic transition. With half of the pregnant women Being anaemic and 23 percent of children Being Born with low Birth weight (NFHS-4), the provision of essential health and nutrition inputs Becomes a topmost priority. The Government of India has in place nutrition and health programmes (ICDS and NHM) which include nutrition based interventions. However, the proBlem in Rajasthan is the low coverage of these interventions over the last 10 years (Kohli et. al., 2017). This study is an attempt to estimate the costs and Benefits accruing from increasing the coverage of the national interventions in Rajasthan. The Benefits are measured in terms of the number of years of life saved due to decreased child mortality and valued at 3 times the value of GDP/capita. Benefits also include the value of avoiding a brief period of life spent living with the disability arising from nutrition related illness. Five alternate scenarios have Been created on the Basis of specific nutrition Based interventions which include counselling for Behaviour change, supplementary food, micronutrient supplements, community Based treatment of Severe Acute Malnutrition and an overall package consisting of all interventions. Estimated Benefits for Rajasthan from the overall package at 3 times the value of per capita SDP and discounted at 5% are Rs. 91,577 and estimated costs are Rs. 14,144 per Beneficiary, resulting in a benefit/cost ratio of approximately 6. The benefit/cost ratios estimated at 3 per cent and 8 per cent discount rate are 12 and 3 respectively. Similar calculations have been carried-out for other four scenarios. To conclude, we oBserve suBstantial Benefits from delivery of nutritional Based interventions although we have used national cost estimates as the suB-national data is unable, but the variation in results is expected to Be smaller. 1 Policy Abstract Direct nutrition based interventions • Problem: In Rajasthan, 39 percent of children below five years are stunted and 23 percent are wasted. 46.8 percent of women in reproductive age group are anaemic (NFHS-4). Such nutritional deficiencies adversely affect the health of mother and children. • Intervention: Direct nutrition-based interventions include counselling for behaviour change, supplementary food and micronutrient supplements. • Overview: The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and the Ministry of Women and Child Development are the major nodal agencies involved in implementing the nutrition Based interventions present in India’s policy framework. (Avula et al. 2013). These interventions are agreed upon by a large number of stakeholders including Coalition for Food and Nutrition Security in India (Swaminathan 2009). Bhutta et. al (2008) have done a comprehensive analysis of these interventions. • Implementation Considerations: The demographic and socio-economic conditions at sub-national level might require a tailored approach. Policy makers need to acknowledge the gap arising from inequality concerns (Sharma, 2017). • Costs and Benefits • Costs: It will Be a six-year intervention (2016-2021). Cost will be incurred for provision of supplementary food and micronutrients which are distriButed through government programmes. Cost per Beneficiary is Rs. 14,144 and for a 10 percentage point increase in coverage